Letting Kids Taste Alcohol May Promote Early Drinking

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Children who try a sip of alcohol before sixth grade may be more
likely to start drinking by the time they enter high school, a
new study suggests.

Researchers found that kids who had tastes
of an alcoholic beverage before they started middle school
were five times more likely to have a full drink by ninth grade,
compared with their classmates who had not tasted alcohol.

These "early sippers" were also four times more likely to get
drunk or
binge drink by their first semester of high school compared
with their peers who abstained, the study showed.

Although there is a widespread belief that sipping alcohol at a
young age may be a protection against later heavy drinking, the
study shows that such sipping is actually associated with an
increased risk of drinking, as well as using other substances, by
the time kids enter high school, said Kristina Jackson, a
co-author of the study and a researcher at the Center for Alcohol
and Addiction Studies at Brown University in Providence, Rhode
Island. [ 7
Ways Alcohol Affects Your Health ]

Many of the kids in our study reported that parents — either
knowingly or not — are a source of alcohol, Jackson said.

Young sippers

The study looked at data collected from 561 middle-school
students in Rhode Island, who were followed over a three-year
period, from the time they started sixth grade until they began
ninth grade. The kids were surveyed several times a year about
their use of alcohol, tobacco, marijuana and other drugs,
according to the study, which was published online today (March
31) in the Journal of Studies on Alcohol and Drugs.

The results showed that by sixth grade nearly 30 percent of kids
had tasted alcohol that was not part of a religious celebration,
and they typically had this first sip by age 7. Most of these
first sips were of wine or beer, and came from
parents offering their kids a taste of their drink at home.

By the time they got to ninth grade, about 26 percent of the
early sippers had consumed a full drink, and about 9 percent had
gotten drunk. In comparison, among their nonsipping peers, 6
percent had consumed a full drink and 2 percent had gotten drunk,
according to the study.

These findings dispute what some have dubbed the "European
approach," of exposing children to
alcohol at a young age in hopes that this will protect kids
against subsequent drinking because it makes drinking seem less
taboo.

"We need to be very careful not to assume that early alcohol
consumption will somehow protect children or teach them how to
drink safely," Jackson told Live Science.

The study shows that early sipping is not necessarily harmless,
she told Live Science, noting that although
alcohol problems among teens may be lower in some Southern
European countries, that's not the case in Britain, Ireland or
Northern European countries.

Some weaknesses of this study are that it only included kids in
one state and may not reflect alcohol patterns in the rest of the
U.S., and it's also not known whether similar results might be
seen in children whose first sips of alcohol occur at an older
age than the kids in the study.

"Our findings underscore the importance of advising parents to
provide clear, consistent messages about the unacceptability of
alcohol consumption for youth," Jackson said.

She said offering your child a sip of your drink is not
advisable, as it may send the wrong message. It may suggest to
young people that drinking is okay, especially when alcohol is
offered by a parent.

"Younger teens and tweens may be unable to understand the
difference between drinking a sip of alcohol and drinking one or
more drinks," Jackson said.